Blog Posts by Joel Gurin and John Horrigan, Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau

by Joel Gurin and John Horrigan, Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau

July 15, 2010 - 04:17 PM

[[wysiwyg_imageupload:78:height=98,width=70]]The FCC receives thousands of complaints a year about cell-phone bill shock — what happens when consumers get sudden, unexpected increases in their bills from one month to the next. In May, we released a national survey, done with two major research firms, showing that 17 percent of Americans — 30 million people — have experienced this problem. Click here for the whitepaper on the FCC survey.

Now, rather than focusing on ways to address consumers' concerns, the wireless trade association (CTIA — The Wireless Association) has been hard at work finding unfounded ways to criticize the FCC's data. The association's latest attack on the FCC's study is based on an astounding misstatement: that as many as 70 percent of the people we interviewed were teenagers. This is simply untrue — in fact, we made it clear that we interviewed only adults.

It's unfortunate that CTIA, which represents one of the country's most innovative and productive industries, has decided that ignoring or distorting the facts is a better strategy than simply addressing wireless customers' concerns. This trade association apparently believes there's nothing to worry about if 30 million Americans have gotten sudden increases on their cell-phone bills.